In Goran Lennmarker’s Affirmation, There Is No Alternative To Nagorn

IN GORAN LENNMARKER’S AFFIRMATION, THERE IS NO ALTERNATIVE TO NAGORNO KARABAKH PEACEFUL SETTLEMENT

Noyan Tapan

Feb 9, 2009

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 9, NOYAN TAPAN. RA Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian
at the February 9 meeting with Goran Lennmarker, OSCE Parliamentary
Assembly President’s Special Representative for the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict, presented the latest developments in the Nagorno Karabakh
settlement negotiations process, the results of Armenian and Azeri
Presidents’ meeting in Zurich. In that context it was stressed that
the 2008 November 2 Moscow Declaration, as well as the statements of
Minsk Group co-chairing countries’ Foreign Ministers and OSCE Foreign
Ministers’ Council in Helsinki create a good basis for the progress
of negotiations on Nagorno Karabakh settlement.

G. Lennmarker, in his turn, emphasized that the negotiations process
going on within the framework of the Minsk Group can result in
problem’s settlement. He gave assurance that there is no alternative
to the Nagorno Karabakh peaceful settlement.

According to the report provided by the RA Foreign Ministry Press
and Information Department, during the meeting E. Nalbandian and
G. Lennmarker also exchanged thoughts about EU Eastern Partnership
proposal.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1011988

Mobile Revenues In Armenia Grow 32.8% In 2008

MOBILE REVENUES IN ARMENIA GROW 32.8% IN 2008
by Seth Wallis-Jones

Global Insight
Global Markets Research Centre
February 9, 2009

The RA National Statistics Society has released data on Armenian
telecoms revenues in 2008, reports the ARKA news agency. Total telecoms
revenues were 169.1 billion dram ($552US million), up by 14.9% in a
year. This was driven by mobile revenues, which rose by 32.8% to 112
billion dram (66.2% of the total). Internet and data revenues also
grew rapidly, up by 52.3% year-on-year (y/y), although still only
amounting to 4.686 billion dram. TV broadcast revenues were up by
7.3% to 3.386 billion dram while fixed-line revenues fell by 18.2%
to 43.8 billion dram.

Significance:Fixed telephony revenues are rapidly falling as mobile
telephony takes over–in 2007 a 3.4% increase was recorded in the
fixed-line subscriber base, but this data would indicate that this
situation has reversed–although some loosening of Armentel’s monopoly
has occurred in recent years, which may have helped depress prices
with new VoIP services being established. With a relatively small and
rapidly shrinking revenue base for fixed services, it may be difficult
for Armentel’s fixed-line businesses to maintain a firm position in
the market from which additional services, such as broadband and video,
can establish a major role and replace revenues.

6.3% unemployment in Armenia last year

6.3% unemployment in Armenia last year

YEREVAN, February 6. /ARKA/. The RA Statistical Service reports 6.3%
unemployment in Armenia last year against 7% in 2007.

Last December the RA State Employment Agency officially registered
90,200 jobseekers, with 77,000 of them being unemployed. The
unemployment status was granted to 74,700 people.

By the end of last December, 56,400 unemployed women had been
officially registered in Armenia ` 62.5%.
By the end of last year, Armenia’s economically active population
reached 1,194,600, with 1,119,700 of them being employed.

By the end of last December, 16,600 people had been on the dole against
15,100 at the end of December 2007, the average monthly amount being
14,280 AMD (12,643 AMD at the end of December 2007).

By the end of last December, the officially registered demand for labor
force was 668 vacancies (115 unemployed people per vacancy). `0–

Nalbandian, Babacan To Meet In Munich

NALBANDIAN, BABACAN TO MEET IN MUNICH

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.02.2009 14:57 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan said he will
meet his Armenian counterpart Edward Nalbandian on the margins of
the Munich Security Conference, Hurriyet daily reports.

Babacan and Nalbandian met during the World Economic Forum (WEF)
in Davos last week.

"There is an ongoing process between Turkey and Armenia. When a
tangible outcome is achieved it will be announced," Babacan said.

A warmer period in relations between the two states started when
Turkish President Abdullah Gul paid a landmark visit to Yerevan in
September to watch a World Cup qualifier.

The contacts were continued at the ministerial level.

PACE Gave Armenia A Chance To Continue Reforms

PACE GAVE ARMENIA A CHANCE TO CONTINUE REFORMS

PanARMENIAN.Net
05.02.2009 15:46 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The decision not to suspend Armenia’s voting rights
in PACEM is a new chance for official Yerevan to accomplish the
process of reforms, a member of the Armenian delegation to PACE said.

"The Assembly instructed its monitoring group to assess the steps the
Armenian government undertakes to alleviate post-election tensions. We
should carry out the essential reforms during a certain period of
time," Armen Rustamian said.

"During their recent visits to Armenia, the rapporteurs of the
PACE monitoring committee made certain that the Armenian leadership
demonstrated political will. A fact-finding group on March 1 events
was formed. Amendments were introduced into articles 225 and 300 of
the RA Penal Code," he said.

ArmRosGasprom Leadership Discusses 2009 Projects In Armenia

ARMROSGASPROM LEADERSHIP DISCUSSES 2009 PROJECTS IN ARMENIA

ARKA
Feb 5, 2009

YEREVAN, February 5. /ARKA/. The Directorial Board of Armenia’s gas
monopoly ArmRosGasProm has discussed short-range objectives.

"During the meeting, the ArmRosGasProm Directorial Board summed up
the 2008 results and discussed this year’s programs," the company’s
press service reports.

The company’s leadership also discussed current issues and made
relevant decisions.

As of February 1, 2009, some 575,844 gas consumers were recorded in
Armenia, with natural gas supplies to the country increasing by 9.74%
year-on-year to about 2.254bln cubic meters (against 2.054bln cubic
meters in 2007). Gas consumption rose 11.2% year-on-year to over
2.078bln cubic meters (1.869bln cubic meters in 2007).

Monopolist in Armenia’s gas supply market, ArmRosGasProm CJSC was
established in 1997. Gazprom OJCS and the RA Ministry of Energy
used to hold 45% of the company’s shares each, with Itera Oil and
Gas Company owning 10% of ArmRosGasProm. After implementing two
of the three planned stages of its investment program (and buying
extra shares of ArmRosGasProm in 2006 and 2008) Gazprom became
75.55% shareholder of the company, with Itera now holding 4.44%
of ArmRosGasProm’s shares.

Samed Seidov: "If The Council Of Europe Continues Double Standards A

SAMED SEIDOV: "IF THE COUNCIL OF EUROPE CONTINUES DOUBLE STANDARDS AGAINST AZERBAIJAN, THE POSITION OF OUR COUNTRY TO THIS ORGANIZATION WILL CHANGE"

Today.Az
02 February 2009 [17:57]

The Council of Europe applies double standards towards Azerbaijan
and if such policy continues Azerbaijan might review position on this
organization, said head of the Azerbaijani delegation in PACE Samed
Seidov at today’s session of Milli Medjlis.

He noted that Azerbaijan has fulfilled all its committments assumed
during CE accession except for the law "On alternative service". He
said European deputies realize the complexity of adoption of this law,
as Azerbaijan is at war with Armenia".

Meanwhile, Seidov, speaking about raising the issue of appointment
of a rapporteur "on political prisoners" in PACE, said this is an
example of double standards towards Azerbaijan.

"PACE has not deprived Armenia of the voting right due to the
post-electoral situation in this country, where 12 people died during
protest, mass medias were closed and several opposition deputies
arrested, while the activity of NGOs was limited.

Yet in its document PACE has never mentioned the term "political
prisoners in Armenia" and contended itself with the formulation
"persons under arrest". However, on this background, PACE is raising
the issue of the need to appoint a rapporteur on "political prisoners"
in Azerbaijan, though this issue was settled in this country several
years ago", said Seidov.

Family Of Information Technologies Getting Expanded

FAMILY OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES GETTING EXPANDED

Panorama.am
12:41 02/02/2009

The list of members of the Union of Information Technologies
Enterprises is getting expanded, reports the public relations
department of the union. According to the source famous companies in
information and communication technologies join them. The new members
of UITE are "D-Link" international company Armenian branch providing
network and telecommunication equipments (),
"Sinergy International Systems" specialized in Web Database,
Web Portal and Web Services solutions (),
and "Macadamian" company specialized in design and engineering
().

It is remarkable that during world economic crisis private sector and
state communication is getting strengthened; besides private sector
becomes consolidated.

Note that UITE is a business association of information and
communication technologies in Armenia and consolidates more than 30
local and international companies.

http://www.dlink.am
http://www.synisys.com
http://www.macadamian.com

Auction: Jean Jansem (b. 1920) Armenian/ French

Auction Central News, NY
Feb 1 2009

Lot 182
Jean Jansem (b. 1920) Armenian/ French

STILL LIFE WITH PEARS, color lithograph, signed in pencil, from the
numbered edition 120, image 16 ½ x 23 ¾", full margins, soft handling
creases, faint discoloration at left and right sheet edge, otherwise
in good condition.

View Images, Terms & conditions
5114

http://www.liveauctioneers.com/item/616

The Last Armenian In Bangladesh

THE LAST ARMENIAN IN BANGLADESH

Jakarta Globe
/7963.html
Jan 30 2009
Indonesia

Michael Joseph Martin is guarded about his exact age and is reluctant
to accept he will be the last in a long line of Armenians to make a
major contribution to the history of Bangladesh.

Dhaka, the Bangladeshi capital, was once home to thousands of migrants
from the former Soviet republic who grew to dominate the city’s trade
and business life.

But Martin, in his 70s, is now the only one left.

"When I die, maybe one of my three daughters will fly in from Canada
to keep our presence here alive," Martin said hopefully, speaking
broken Bengali with a thick accent. "Or perhaps other Armenians will
come from somewhere else."

Martin came to Dhaka in 1942 during World War II, following in the
footsteps of his father, who had settled in the region decades earlier.

They joined an Armenian community in Bangladesh dating back to the
16th century, but now Martin worries about who will look after the
large Armenian church in the city’s old quarter.

"This is a blessed place and God won’t leave it unprotected and uncared
for," he said of the Church of Holy Resurrection, which was built in
1781 in the Armanitola, or Armenian district.

Martin, whose full name is Mikel Housep Martirossian, looks after
the church and its graveyard where 400 of his compatriots are buried,
including his wife, who died three years ago.

When their children, all Bangladeshi passport holders, left the
country, Martin became the sole remaining Armenian there. He now
lives alone in an enormous mansion on the church grounds.

"When I walk, sometimes I feel spirits moving around. These are the
spirits of my ancestors. They were noble men and women, now resting in
peace," said Martin, who is stooped and frail, but retains a detailed
knowledge of the Armenian history in Dhaka.

Marble tombstones bear family names such as Sarkies, Manook and
Aratoon from a time when Armenians were Dhaka’s wealthiest merchants
with palatial homes who traded jute, spices, indigo and leather.

Martin, himself a former trader, said the Armenians, persecuted by
Turks and Persians, were embraced in what is now Bangladesh, first
by the Mughals in the 16th and 17th centuries, and then by the British.

Armenians were commonly lawyers, merchants and officials holding
senior public positions. They were also devout Christians, who built
beautiful churches in the Indian subcontinent.

"Their numbers fluctuated with the prospects in trading in Dhaka,"
said Muntasir Mamun, a historian at Dhaka University. "Sometimes there
were several thousand Armenians trading in the Bengal region. They were
always an important community in Dhaka and dominated the country’s
trading. They were the who’s who in town. They celebrated all their
religious festivals with pomp and style."

The decline came after the British left India and the subcontinent was
partitioned in 1947, with Dhaka becoming the capital of East Pakistan,
and then of Bangladesh after it gained independence in 1971.

These days, the Armenian Church holds only occasional services,
with a Catholic priest from a nearby seminary coming in to lead
Christmas prayers.

Martin said the Armenian social scene came to a halt after the last
Orthodox priest left in the late 1960s, but he is determined to ensure
the church’s legacy endures.

"I’ve seen bad days before, but we always bounced back. I am sure
Armenians will come back here for trade and business. I will then
rest in peace beside my wife."

http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/life-times/article